1,001 Novels: A Library of America
A Time to Kill (1989)
by John Grisham
Mississippi: 19/19
I'm elated, finishing Louisiana and Mississippi in back-to-back weeks. Florida is a real (metaphorical) breath of fresh air after reading so much about racial hatred and race-based injustice. Fitting to end Mississippi with John Grisham, Mississippi best-sellingist author and all-around good guy. Artistically, it's hard to say much about the man beyond pointing to his status as a perennial best seller. He doesn't have the literary fictionish touch of Stephen King, and the court room thriller doesn't have the cache of detective fiction or police procedural. And, with a net worth estimated at 400 million, I doubt he cares, or at least, he doesn't act like someone concerned with his literary legacy.
A Time to Kill is, of course, his first novel, about a young-ish criminal defense lawyer in small-town Mississippi who is hired to defend an African American accused of gunning down the two white men who raped his ten-year-old daughter. It's the kind of crime that transcends racial prejudice, a fact which is key to the plot in many different ways. For me, it was all very "busman's holiday"- reading about my day-to-day concerns of being a criminal defense lawyer. I think, though, you can tell that Grisham wrote this book without an inkling that he would became a mega seller of popular fiiction.
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